The section of biographies in the Siku quanshu thus includes 60 books, and the cunmu 存目 catalogue of available books describes a further amount of 380 books. Six of these belong to a fifth category, "separate records" (bielu 別錄). These biographies cover the lives of rebels like An Lushan 安祿山 (Yao Anneng's 姚汝能 An Lushan shiji 安祿山事蹟) or usurpers like Liu Yu 劉豫, who founded the state of Qi 齊, when the Jurchens occupied northern China (Yang Kebi's 楊克弼 Wei Yu zhuan 偽豫傳 and Cao Rong's 曹溶 Liu Yu shiji 劉豫事蹟).

An overview of the historical development of the literary genre of biographies can be found further below.

The imperial collectaneaSiku quanshu 四庫全書 quite correctly identified these as fiction and refrained from including them into the collection (with a few exceptions that are found in the subcategory of tales among the Masters and Philosophers). The more scholarly genre of biographies is first used in the book Yanzi chunqiu 晏子春秋 (as jiazhuan 家傳 "family or personal report") or the book Kongzi sanchao ji 孔子三朝記 that recorded the conversation between Confucius and Duke Ai of Lu 魯哀公 (r. 494–468 BCE) during three audiences.

When Pei Songzhi 裴松之 commented the dynastic history Sanguozhi 三國志 and Liu Xiaobiao 劉孝標 the collection Shishuo xinyu 世說新語 (that is focusing of the conversations and lives of various scholars of the 3rd and 4th centuries CE), both made use of a vast array of biographies.

From the beginning, historians discerned between different types of biography. The first criterion was ruler or subject, the second legitimate or (semi-)legitimate ruler, and the third the type of political, social and moral function. Biographies of rulers are generally mixtures of narrative parts, describing youth, personal character and life, and a chronicle part that lists the political decisions and activities. Biographies of local potentates that (illegally) seized the title of king or emperor were always separated from those of the rightful rulers.

"Normal" persons were not always, but often characterized by a general term and thus part of "collective" biographies of, for instance, benevolent or competent officials (xunli 循吏), cruel officials (kuli 酷吏), magicians and diviners (fangji 方技), Confucian scholars (rulin 儒林), writers (wenyuan 文苑), scholars or thinkers living in seclusion (yinyi 隱逸), women of outstanding moral behaviour (lienü 列女), persons displaying filial piety (xiaoyi 孝義) or loyality (zhongyi 忠義), or rebels (zeichen 賊臣) and traitors (jianchen 姦臣). Other collective biographies assemble the vitae of officials serving in a particular state institution, like the Hanlin Academy 翰林院 or the Censorate 御史臺. Other tyes of collective biographies joined scholars with the same ideas, persons with similar careers, or those coming from the same town or region.

In the oldest book catalogues (Qilu 七錄 and the bibliographic chapters in the Suishu 隋書 - see Jingji zhi 經籍志 - , the Jiutangshu 舊唐書 and Xintangshu 新唐書; still used in the Song period catalogue Suichutang shumu 遂初堂書目) the section of biographies is called zazhuan 雜傳 "miscellaneous biographies", referring to the stand-alone character of these books, in contrast to the biographies embedded in history books.

The introduction to the subcategory of zazhuan in the Suishu bibliography is comparatively long. It explains that during the Spring and Autumn period 春秋 (770-5th cent. BCE) countless biographical information was recorded and storied in the royal archive (tianfu 天府) as well as in those of the regional rulers or the branches of ducal houses (mengfu 盟府). Even various offices had their own archives, where the careers (with ups and downs) of individual office-holders were recorded. For average people from "among the masses", moral conduct was the focus of biographies. Based on these records the local administration would be able to recommend "worthy and competent" persons (xian zhe neng zhe 賢者能者) for promotion. This system of recording the circumstances of all officials' lives followed a recommendation by Dong Zhongshu 董仲舒 to Emperor Wu 漢武帝 (r. 141-87 BCE) of the Han dynasty 漢 (206 BCE-220 CE) and was brought to perfection by Sima Qian 司馬遷 (c. 145-c. 90 BCE) and Ban Gu 班固 (32-92 CE), authors of the first two official histories.

These official biographies were enriched by collections of normal biographies, the first of which, called Liexiantu 列仙圖 "Chart of the many immortals", was written by Ruan Cang 阮倉. The librarian and bibliographer Liu Xiang 劉向 (c. 77-c. 6 BCE) compiled the collective biographies Liexianzhuan 列仙傳 "Biographies of immortals", Lieshizhuan 列士傳 "Servicemen/scholars" and Lienüzhuan 列女傳 "Eminent women". During the Later Han period 後漢 (25-220 CE) the genres of biographies of honourable elderly persons (qijiu 耆舊) and persons of moral integrity (jieshi 節士) became fashionable, along with such on persons known for their virtues (mingde 名德) or "worthies of the past/exemplarious worthies" (xianxian 先賢).

From the 3rd century on more and more phantastic elements crept into the genre of biographies, so that it became necessary to discern between historiography and fiction. This is in fact done in the Suishu bibliography, whose biographies section begins with "worthies" of all regions of China, continues with "eminent scholars" (gaoshi 高士) and such living in seclusion and filial and loyal persons, then begins a section of family chronicles (jiazhuan 家傳), one of eminent women, and a short one on Buddhist monks, and ends with phantastic collections or "immortals" and other supernatural persons.

The structure of the subcategory of biographies in the Jiutangshu and Xintangshu is quite similar to this model, but in the latter book the biographies of women are grouped at the end of the section. Even the bibliography in the alternative historyTongzhi 通志 which is compiled with great care, follows this principle. It introduces a new category of persons following a quite new channel of career: examination graduates (kedi 科第).

From the early Song period 宋 (960-1279) on the term zazhuan is replaced by the term zhuanji. The bibliography Junzhai dushu zhi 郡齋讀書志 shows how heterogenous the subcategory of biographies can be. It includes fictional stories like Huangdi neizhuan 黃帝內傳 "Esoteric biography of the Yellow Emperor", Han Wu neizhuan 漢武內傳 "Esoteric biography of Emperor Wu of the Han", biographies of Confucius and his descendants like Kongzi biannian 孔子編年 and Dongjia zaji 東家雜記, an official register of eminent families of the Tang period 唐 (618-907), Yuanhe xingzuan 元和姓纂, and also serious research on family names like Xingyuan yunpu 姓源韻譜 (arranged phonetically) by Zhang Jiuling 張九齡 (678-740).

The bibliographic chapter in the statecraft encyclopaediaWenxian tongkao 文獻通考 includes very different books in the biographies section: Quite a large amount of books in this subcategory belong to a type of writing that might be called "personal memories" and concentrate on singulary events, like the participation in a military campaign, an inspection tour or a mission to a foreign country, like Ping Shu shilu 平蜀實錄 "Veritable records of the pacification of Shu" or Xuanhe shi Jin lu 宣和使金錄 "Memories from a mission to the Jin empire during the Xuanhe reign". Other texts belong to the genre of "miscellaneous histories", like Li Zhao's 李肇 (Tang) Guoshibu (唐)國史補 or Li Deyu's 李德裕 Ci Liushi jiuwen 次柳氏舊聞.